NASA’s always had a knack for making the wonders of science look like incredible art; gazing at their various high-def visions of the universe is awe-inspiring to the highest degree. In addition to its incredible command of the cosmos, the agency has also spent the past fifty years commissioning terrestrial creative talents to find inspiration in its behind-the-scenes happenings.

The NASA Art Program was launched in 1962—a mere four years after the organization itself was founded—and a set of images from the archives has been uploaded to Flickr. The selection gives a distinctly human perspective to the oft-mind-bending realities of exploration beyond earth, in the form of illustrations, sketches, paintings, photos, and more.

In fact, everyone’s favorite Americana master, Norman Rockwell, got in on the action in 1965 with an oil on canvas piece depicting two mere mortals getting into their soon-to-be-gravity-defying gear:

Astronauts John Young and Gus Grissom are suited for the first flight of the Gemini program in March 1965. NASA loaned Norman Rockwell a Gemini spacesuit in order to make this painting as accurate as possible.

Which is awesome; Normal Rockwell, a paintbrush, and a spacesuit, happily hangin'. [Hyperallergic]

Paul Calle's pencil sketch Suiting Up shows members of the Apollo 11 crew on July 16th, 1969. He was the only artist present.

When Thoughts Turn Inward by Henry Casselli in 1981, a watercolor of astronaut John Young during suit-up.

Fred Freeman painted the acrylic-on-canvas Saturn Blockhouse in 1968.

First Steps, by Mitchell Jamieson, is an acrylic, gauze, and paper on canvas depiction of astronaut Gordon Cooper emerging back onto solid ground after 22 turns around the world on the Mercury spacecraft.